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Ten people found guilty of cyber-bullying Brigitte Macron,
A Paris court has found ten people guilty of cyber-bullying Brigitte Macron, the wife of French President Emmanuel Macron, in a ruling that is being widely viewed as a significant affirmation of legal protections against online abuse.
The defendants were convicted of spreading false claims about Brigitte Macron’s gender and sexuality, alongside what the court described as “malicious remarks” targeting the 24-year age difference between her and the president. The judge said the eight men and two women involved had acted with a clear intention to cause harm, publishing remarks online that were degrading, insulting and deliberately hurtful.
Most of those found guilty received suspended prison sentences of up to eight months, reflecting the court’s emphasis on deterrence and accountability rather than incarceration. One defendant was immediately jailed after failing to appear in court, while several others were ordered to have their social media accounts suspended. The court also mandated prevention and awareness courses, underlining a broader effort to curb similar behaviour in the future.
Speaking after the verdict, Brigitte Macron’s lawyer, Jean Ennochi, welcomed the outcome, stressing that the preventative measures were especially important. “The most important things are the prevention courses and the suspension of some of the accounts.
The case also revisited the activities of two prominent figures previously linked to the conspiracy theories. Self-styled independent journalist Natacha Rey and internet fortune-teller Amandine Roy had been found guilty of slander in 2024 for claiming that France’s first lady had never existed, alleging instead that her brother, Jean-Michel Trogneux, had changed gender and taken her identity. Although they were later cleared on appeal — with judges ruling that claiming someone had changed gender did not necessarily constitute an attack on their honour — the Macrons have since decided to take that case to France’s highest court of appeal.
The personal toll of the cyber-bullying was detailed during the trial by Tiphaine Auzière, Brigitte Macron’s daughter from a previous marriage. She told the court that the sustained online attacks had negatively affected her mother’s health and daily life. Auzière explained that Brigitte Macron had become extremely cautious about her clothing, posture and public appearance, knowing that images of her were often repurposed online to support conspiracy narratives.
While her mother had, over time, “learned to live with it”, Auzière said the impact on the family extended to her own children, who were subjected to taunts at school because of the rumours. Her testimony added emotional weight to the proceedings and reinforced the court’s view of the real-world consequences of online harassment.
Monday’s ruling is also being seen as a precursor to a much larger legal battle abroad. The Macrons have filed a defamation lawsuit in the United States against right-wing influencer Candace Owens, accusing her of amplifying and sustaining the same conspiracy theories about the first lady’s gender. In their filing, the presidential couple allege that Owens “disregarded all credible evidence disproving her claim in favour of platforming known conspiracy theorists and proven defamers”.
Owens has repeatedly voiced the claims on her podcast and social media platforms and, in March 2024, said she would stake her “entire professional reputation” on her assertion that Brigitte Macron “is in fact a man”. The upcoming US case is expected to test the limits of free speech and defamation law in a highly charged political and cultural environment.
Initially, advisers had urged the Macrons to ignore the rumours, warning that legal action could unintentionally amplify them. However, last year marked a decisive change in strategy. The presidential couple concluded that the scale, persistence and coordination of the online attacks had grown too large to overlook. Despite the personal risks of exposing private details in a US courtroom, they chose to confront the conspiracy theories directly.
False claims that Brigitte Macron is a transgender woman have circulated online since Emmanuel Macron was first elected president in 2017. The couple’s relationship has long attracted public attention, particularly because they first met when she was a teacher at his secondary school. They married in 2007, when Emmanuel Macron was 29 and Brigitte Macron was in her mid-50s.
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Philippine Senate Locked Down After Gunshots Fired
The Senate of the Philippines was placed under lockdown on Wednesday after gunshots were heard outside the building in Manila, where Senator Ronald Dela Rosa had reportedly sought refuge amid fears of arrest linked to an International Criminal Court investigation.
Authorities confirmed that shots were fired near the Senate complex, though officials said there were no casualties and have not disclosed who opened fire.
Television footage showed heavily armed police commandos and anti-riot officers entering and surrounding the Senate building while lawmakers remained inside during the security lockdown.
Dela Rosa, a close ally of former Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte, had earlier claimed he believed his arrest was imminent and urged supporters to resist any attempt to detain him.
The senator is accused by the ICC of involvement in alleged extrajudicial killings during Duterte’s controversial anti-drug campaign, when Dela Rosa served as national police chief.
Thousands of suspected drug dealers and users were killed during the so-called “war on drugs,” which remains under international investigation for possible crimes against humanity.
Duterte himself has been detained in The Hague since March 2025 pending ICC proceedings.
Despite speculation surrounding a possible arrest operation, Philippine Interior Secretary Jonvic Remulla denied that authorities were attempting to detain Dela Rosa.
“We are not here to arrest Senator Dela Rosa,” Remulla told reporters. “In fact, we are here to protect him.”
He added that President Ferdinand Marcos Jr had issued “strict instructions” to ensure the safety of senators during the incident.
Officials said Dela Rosa remained safe and under security protection inside the Senate complex.
No arrests have yet been made in connection with the gunfire, while authorities continue investigating the incident.
Senate speaker Alan Peter Cayetano appealed to the public for assistance, asking anyone with video footage of the shooting to share it with investigators.
Outside the Senate, protesters gathered demanding Dela Rosa’s detention and extradition to stand trial alongside Duterte.
The senator’s legal team has already petitioned the Supreme Court of the Philippines to block any extradition process.
The political crisis comes amid growing tensions between the Duterte family and the administration of Marcos.
Although the two political dynasties were once allies, their relationship collapsed two years ago and has since developed into a bitter feud.
Earlier this week, the House of Representatives of the Philippines voted to begin impeachment proceedings against Vice-President Sara Duterte, Rodrigo Duterte’s daughter.
The Senate, where Duterte allies still hold significant influence, has the authority to decide whether the impeachment effort succeeds.
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Philippine Vice-President Sara Duterte Impeached Again
The House of Representatives of the Philippines has voted to impeach Philippine Vice-President Sara Duterte for a second time, escalating a deepening political conflict that could threaten her chances of running for president in 2028.
Monday’s vote now sends the impeachment case to the Senate of the Philippines, where senators will decide whether Duterte should be convicted and removed from office.
If found guilty, the 47-year-old daughter of former Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte would also be barred from holding public office in the future.
Sara Duterte is currently considered one of the leading early contenders to succeed President Ferdinand Marcos Jr in the next presidential election, despite an increasingly bitter fallout between the former allies.
The impeachment complaint centres on allegations that Duterte misused public funds and made public threats against Marcos, his wife and his cousin, a former House speaker.
The vice-president had previously been impeached in 2025 over the same accusations, but the Supreme Court of the Philippines halted the process on technical grounds before a Senate trial could begin.
The case resurfaced this year after a House committee reviewing the allegations concluded there were sufficient grounds to proceed with impeachment.
Duterte has strongly denied wrongdoing and dismissed the proceedings as politically motivated.
In a formal written response, she described the impeachment case as “nothing more than a scrap of paper” and declined to attend committee hearings examining the accusations.
Following Monday’s vote, Duterte’s legal team said the responsibility now lies with her accusers to prove their allegations in accordance with the law.
“The burden now rests on the accusers to substantiate their claims,” her defence counsel said in a statement.
A total of 257 out of 290 lawmakers present voted in favour of impeachment, comfortably surpassing the one-third threshold required to send the case to the Senate.
Political analysts say the vote highlighted the strength of Marcos’ influence within the House of Representatives, where lawmakers are often aligned with the sitting president in the Philippines’ patronage-driven political system.
However, Duterte’s fate in the Senate remains uncertain.
Unlike House members, Philippine senators are elected nationwide and are generally viewed as more politically independent because many harbour presidential or vice-presidential ambitions of their own.
The Senate has historically served as a launching platform for future national candidates, making the outcome of any impeachment trial difficult to predict.
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US and French Passengers Test Positive After Deadly Hantavirus Cruise Ship Outbreak
Health authorities in the United States and France have confirmed new hantavirus cases linked to the outbreak aboard the expedition cruise ship MV Hondius, as more than 90 passengers continue to be repatriated from Spain’s Canary Islands.
US health officials said an American passenger who returned from the vessel tested positive for hantavirus, while another US national on the same repatriation flight showed mild symptoms.
According to the United States Department of Health and Human Services, both passengers travelled back to the United States in “biocontainment units out of an abundance of caution.”
All 17 American citizens aboard the repatriation flight are expected to undergo medical assessments at a healthcare facility in Nebraska. Authorities also said seven additional US passengers who had returned earlier are being monitored in their home states.
A British national living in the US was also evacuated alongside the American passengers.
Meanwhile, French Health Minister Stephane Rist confirmed that a French woman who tested positive is isolating in Paris, warning that her condition was worsening.
French authorities said 22 contact cases linked to the woman had already been identified and traced.
The outbreak aboard the MV Hondius has already claimed the lives of three passengers — a Dutch couple and a German woman. Officials confirmed that at least two of the deaths were directly linked to the virus.
The World Health Organization believes some passengers may have contracted the Andes strain of hantavirus while travelling through remote areas of South America before infections spread among individuals onboard.
Hantaviruses are typically transmitted through contact with infected rodents, including exposure to rodent urine, droppings or saliva. However, the Andes strain is one of the few known forms capable of limited human-to-human transmission.
Symptoms can include fever, severe fatigue, muscle pain, stomach problems, vomiting, diarrhoea and breathing difficulties.
WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned that the US decision not to fully adopt the organisation’s recommendations for managing returning passengers “may have risks.”
The WHO has advised a 42-day isolation period for those leaving the ship.
However, acting head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Jay Bhattacharya said authorities did not want to create unnecessary public alarm, stressing that person-to-person spread remains rare.
“It should not be treated like the Covid virus,” Bhattacharya said.
Images from the Canary Islands showed cruise passengers wearing protective blue gowns, face masks and medical caps while disembarking at the port of Granadilla de Abona on Sunday.
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